I’m struggling to disconnect from work. I’ve been working on an interesting problem for the last couple of weeks (compacting change data capture events from sharded MySQL servers into BigQuery). It’s an interesting technical problem. There are lots of optimization opportunities and novel patterns I can introduce.

I’m on vacation for the next two weeks but since starting my trip my mind keeps returning to the problem. I’ve even solved a few issues and come up with new patterns to try while daydreaming as we travel. Obviously I haven’t implemented any changes, I deliberately didn’t bring my work laptop with me. I emailed those solutions to my work email address so they get out of my head but that hasn’t helped. I just visualized more optimizations while hiking today.

There is no expectations from my leadership to work while on vacation.

How do others disconnect from work when I enjoy the problem solving aspects of my work?

  • @hardypart@feddit.de
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    71 year ago

    Why do you need to disconnect in the first place? If you love thinking about and working on the issue, why not just do it?

      • @Erk@cdda.social
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        21 year ago

        I think the only risk is not noticing when you’re no longer enjoying it. You can do a thing you love and not burn out, even when it’s also work.

        Diversifying interests is more burnout protection because if you have several interests and you get tired of one, you can more easily tell, and just go do something different for a while.